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LeWSREEL
L * po*tn L»- •**othtr
' s. C. New.
' ►"*
Ii»
SOUTHERN
A L 1 F O R N I A
DAILYPTROJAN
FINAL EXAMS
Final examinations be-9'" Friday, January 22. Complete schedule on page four.
Los Angeles, California, Thursday, January 7, 1932,
MS BAND [CED FOR |0R DANCE
W. S. G. A. Holds Special Meet At Noon Today
No. 69
GOVERNMENT’S FOREIGN BOND STAND FLAYED
Marjorie Grewell, In charge of the W.S.G.A. bridge tea calls a special meeting in S.U. 235 at noon today.
- I Those who will attend: Pauline I -
From New York williams. Eleanor Beris. Eiin. State Department Respon-Will Play At Wrat, Joan McMasters, pat vigne, j sible For Security Loss-
Christy Welsh, Jule Homano, Edith „ r.lacc
«ade- Schiller, Jane McPhee, Tat Dow | ’ pays.
VAN LANDINGHAM ney. Irene Bronais, Betty Jones, | WASHINGTON, Jan. 6.—(UP)—
* official* announced , Mary Jane Hackett, Mary Ann . Mo,.ft, re8pon((lbl,lty for h
have just re- Cotton, Mary Louise Bouelle, Lou- , ttat tlK»> o„. 'losses of American investors on
______________defaulted South American bonds
j:::::: alpha chi alpha
pined great popularity
I, students in the East i Los Angeles on Frl-
Iji, |g time to play for ,liich I* scheduled for tie famous Blue room hotel.
TO PLEDGE SEVEN LEADING WOMEN
was placed on the state department today by Senator Tarter (Mass of Virginia, former secretary of the treasury. He denounced the state department's policy of | passing upon the desirability of foreign loa as floated in this country.
sophomore J Though the approval purported
Seven outstanding . . and junior women will become I to be as to the political desira-Tith them an in'ia 0 ^ pledges of Alpha Chi Alpha, na- i bility only, not the intrinsic
[ftgapements, including u thc Palace hotel fork, the Palmer house the Arizona Biltmore,
I years on the Orphe-
rl tbe boys will invade prepared to give S. C. ad latest musical hits |
tional honorary journalism soror- j "orth, Glass said that the depart-ity, this afternoon at 3 o'clock ln ment acted without authority in
the Alpha Gamma Delta house.
These women have been recognized by the sorority because of their work on campus publications including the Wampus, EI Bodeo, Daily Trojan, and the Student handbook. One of the pre-
ntrj.
i trio, land .i-- one reqUlg|teB for membership in this group is one and a half year's work on one or more of the above
outstanding in accompany the or-| incidentally, Mr. Cave i no mean reputation , betides being able to | in a saxophone, t the prom were placed lerday, and may be
I trom fraternity repre-or at the Student store.
I price of $4 has glv-the slogan, 'Bu'y a i Junior prom and get |pair of socks with what 1 (Adv.)
: ■ H Musicians
id H jy Appear in
■ DOW fl ital Concert
OOPf. ■
■ '■ Kir opening assembly for
fl Khedtiled for this noon titil hall of the College i Trojan musicians will
nfl i program of vocal and
' fl ictions.
-ifl Gould, pianist, will play F Minor” by I.izst, and Stf»ard will play “Min-
i » lonatina by Ravel, ubeth Waldorf, soprano,
ie i “E'er Since the Day lo Thee I Gave Me” from li) Chartentier. “Con-
tail!” from Thomas’ non," and "Dawn" by 11 be sung by Alice Ash-Wtb Rowley will also
--
pu blications.
Juanita Mills, president ot Alpha Chi Alpha, will conduct the pledging ceremony. Miss Rita Padway, national vice-president of the organization will be present.
Following the pledging services, refreshments will be served under the direction of Erma Eldridge.
Street Bridge peering Topic
ing and Construction of will be the subject of ■* to be given by Mr. uiler to studentB in en-la thia morning. Mr. ill make special reier-tbe new Sixth street Be construction of which ■wiilng as engineer of lor the city. Thc lecture Y* '* Science 159 at 11
Md trip of tho semes-
place on Friday,
The itudent a will visit tun.
ttall,
completed Sixth
Aching France
»> ^ 5 —(UP)— Hard k aim!? !!me re*ChiDK
HONORARY GROUP TO HEAR REPORTS
Psl Chl, honorary psychology fraternity will hear reports on studies being carried on by three Ph.D. candidates In the psychology ot voice, in the phenomenon of twins, and in the "knee Jerk" reflex, in the discussion program of the monthly dinner meeting next Tuesday night.
The three candidates who will report are Doncaster Humm, neurologist and clinic worker; Charles Frederick Lindsley, radio speaker and chairman of the speech department at Occidental college; and Walter Varnum, national president of Psi Chi.
Reservations for the dinner should be made in the offlce of Dr. George Mount, according to iJrant Clark, president.
law and without proper know! edge.
BLAMES STATE
"They (the department) are morally responsible for every one of these loans,” Glass said, “for the 9815,000,000 of defaulted South American bonds and for the outstanding indcbtness that will not be paid—probably $5,000,000,000.’
Explaining the department of commerce’s policy of reporting frankly on finance conditions in Latin America, for the benefit of the American people generally. Governor M. Jones, of the department, disclosed tbe Colombian minister hero tried unsuccessfully to hold up a bulletin regarding Colombian conditions.
Later, Jones said, the Colombian | authorities recognized the desirability of tbe report, as a brake on borrowing, and as a result the present Colombian minister was most friendly to department experts.
NO AUTHORITV
It wau knowledge of this testimony that roused Glass, one of the leading finance experts of the country, and father of the Federal Reserve system.
"The state depatrment passes on foreign bonds without th authority of law,” he said. "I pointed that out two years ago. The Senate asked the department by what authority lt was acting. The replay was positively idotic. The Senate unanimously passed a resolution asking the department to desist.
"The bonds were sold in the open market in competition with legitimate securities of legitimate American enterprises.’*
Senator Smith Proposes $200,000,000 Farm Loan
As Rider On Hoover Bill
WASHINGTON, Jan. 6—(UP)—President Hoover’s two-billion dollar reconstruction finance corporation bill, buttressed by a committee report declaring that a critical banking situation needs immediate action, was brought before thc senate today.
A $200,000,000 farm loan appropriation was immediately
proposed an amendment to the bill*-
by Senator Ellison D. Smith, Dem.. | FINISHED
BY APPLICANTS IN PHARMACY SCHOOL
S. C. The Smith amendment would authorize the secretary of agricu'ture to make loans or ad vances on flrst lines of crops, to farmers who are unable to get credit berause of bank failures and the depression.
Disclosure that loans can be made to railroads within a week after the giant government loan-bank Is set up was made by the Senate banking committee In its favorable report on the bill, submitted by Senator F. C. Walcott, Repn., Conn.
2,290 BANKS SUSPENDED
The report said that 2,290 banks suspended during 1931, with total deposits of *1,759,000,000 (billions), nearly one-half of them in the last three months of the year.
In addition the committee also approved the $125,000,000 bill for added capital of the Federal Farm I/oan banks, second item on the president's economic program. The measure carries a $25,000,000 Increase over the fund as voted by the House before the holidays.
PASS NORRIS BILL
The Senate tired after 25 futile ballots in its ‘‘sons of the wild jackass" row over election of a president pro tem, voted to set it aside and for the seventh consecutive time passed the Norris constitutional amendment to abol ish short sessions of Congress, 63 to 7.
The House received a resolution for impeachment of Secretary of Treasury Andrew W. Mellon and passed the tirst deficiency appropriation bill after trimming $14 173,000 from budget estimates in eluding $700,000 designed to in crease the comforts ot congress men's offices.
Gratis Memberships Offered Ad Students ^jr Regulations
As a special inducement to mem ( T Otrirt IVnHJ)
bers of the department of adver-I U, I
Using to attend the Friday noon forum meetings of the Los Ange-lus Advertising club, free memberships in the Junior Advertising club will be given to the two Btudents attending the greatest number of meetings throughout the year ,
All contestants for the memberships will be required to write a 250-word essay on what the meetings hvae meant to them.
The Friday forum is held at the City club, 833 South Spring street at noon. Students may or may not attend the luncheon, which is served for 75 cents.
Airminded students may now obtain private pilot permits wllh reduced eyesight requirements as a result of a new ruling by the aeronautics branch of the United States department of commerce. Dr. Ernest A. Hutchinson, chairman of the department of phys-ics-optics, declared yesterday.
Persons who visit the S.C. department of physics-optics for examination and corrective treatment will profit by the more liberal regulations which ^allow certain visual defects If proper goggles are worn while flying.
f FWk lh* la,t <»uar-
cb commerce. In-
•ri'lLii11 “*
| •true,.,. Sboolt tlle
Rh * ,hp
Uln’ (**rmany, i rc'al n*tioas sev-
rC?™' -
unfavorable
•O in rail-
4a<l a decrease
"•V? f'ar,'yinS cr-^fleoted the
e°ndi tions m
Tickets Now on Sale For W.S.G.A. Mortar Board Bridge Tea Jan. 12
CINEMA INSTITUTE WILL VISIT M-G-M
New methods of foreign syn chronizatlon will be explained and shown to members of the South ern California Cinema Institute during the course of tbelr visit to the Metro Goldwyn Mayer stu dioB this evening. Approximately 50 members of the institute will make the trip, with the possibility that a tew more may be accommodated. Those who wisb to go may sign up in room 225 of tbe Student Union building.
Those who wish to viait tbe M.G.M. studios will assemble in front of the Sludent Union build ing ai 6:45 this evening, in order that the group will arrive at Cul ver City not later than 7:30. The students will be taken to one of the projection rooms where the why and how of foreign synchronization will be explained by Mr. Robert Vogel, head of tbe international publicity department. Pictures will also be shown to tbe students.
Tickets are now on sale for the W.S.G.A.-Mortar Board bridge tea, Tuesday, Jan. 12, from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Women’s Residence hail, states Marjorie Grewell, social chairman of the W.S.G.A. cabinet and chairman for the affair. The tickets may be procured from tbe cashier In tbe Student Union, and from each of the captains and various chairmen. * Refreshment? of sandwiches,
coffee, and candy will be served. The committee, headed by Bobby von KleinSmld has as Its membeis, Edith Gibbs, Marie Wolf-skill, and Eleanor Neft.
Admission tickets at 25 rents are in charge of Jewell Romano. Tbe tickets may be obtained from Velma Ferraris, Grace Edick, Erma Eldridge, and Helen Meadows.
The bridge tea Is sponsored to increase tbe scholarship fund of the two orgauUatiuus.
Men as well as women are invited to the tea and prizes appropriate for both will be on display during the afternoon.
Attractive prizes, donated by the city's leading department stores, will be offered lo those having the 10 highest scores. Elimination of score prizes will afford all players an equal opportunity to win one uf the prizes. Stubs of the tickets given at time of purchase will be drawn.
President To Speak Four Times In Week
Four addresses are on President R. B. von KleinSmid's schedule for the week, the flrst to be given at the Wilshire Ebell club on "The Eighteenth Amendment; Loyalty to tbe Constitution."
The president will talk before the county planning board Saturday afternoon at its meeting at U.C.L.A. Two high school addresses are also scheduled, Thursday at Santa Barbara high school snd Friday at Hollywood high.
Today’s Chapci Program
One hundred and sixty-nine ap> plicants finished the California state board of pharmacy quarterly examination today ln 306 Science hBll and 301 School of Uw building.
The examination, which one must pass in order to become a licensed druggist in California, has been taking place for three days. Six examiners are in charge, and applicants include former residents of the states of New York, Pennsylvania, and Missouri, as well as undergraduates from all parts of southern California.
V. L. Schaefer, one of the examiners, states tbat all California applicants may be undergraduates, while non-residents muBt be graduate's before they are permitted to take the test. However, in 1933, the Pre-requisite law, which requires that all applicants be graduates of recognized colleges, will be in full effect.
Subjects which tlie examination coveerd are: chemistry, toxicology, materia medica, pharmacy, and the identification of drug*. The next state board test will be given the flrst Tuesday of April.
Negro Educator Will Speak At Y.M.C.A. Meeting
With the theme centering around the recent student conference at Asilomar, and with Howard J. Thurman, Negro pastor, poet, and educator secured as principal speaker, the meeting of the Y.M. C.A. tonight promises to set a high standard for the coming year.
Delegates from Southern California to the Asilomar conference will outline the meetluga and Mr. Thurman, one of the speakers and leaders at the conclave, will also give his impressions of the annual outing during bis talk.
Both men and women are invited to attend and reservations may be made up to noon today at the desk in the “Y" hut. The banquet will start at 5:30 p.m. and will coat 50 cents a plate, according to “Y” officials.
Additional entertainment will be offered by a negro male quartet from radio nation KHJ.
BRITISH MOVE AGAINST CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE
Government Outlaws Indian National Congress Organization.
BOMBAY, India, Jan. 6.—(UP) ! —The government dealt another i blow to the Indian Independence movement today by outlawing the j entire National congress organiza- j tion and warning the people to refrain from civil disobedience on threat of severe punishment.
"We cannot tolerate open or secret help for those beyond the law," Sir Frederick Sykes, governor of Bombay, declared In a message to the people. "I^aw-abidlng citizens have nothing to fear from the new ordinances, which will protect people in pursuit of lawful activities. But law-abiding citizens must abstain from the participation in or encouragement of civil disobedience.”
SEIZE FUNDS With the Mahatma Gandhi, leading power of the Nationalists, and his chief lieutenants In prison, the government continued to hold the upper hand In the “warfare" which so far has centered in Bombay and other western regions.
Nationalist funtfi totalling some 50,000 rupees, or about $15,000 were seized from Bombay banks and the arrests of congress off) cials and volunteers, including many women, continued. The flrst efforts of the Nationalists, chiefly women, to picket Bombay shops selling British goo(fw, were unsuc cessful when police arrested or dispersed the pickets.
INVOLVES 500 GROUPS The outlawing of all congress and allied organizations through out Bombay Involved 500 groups including 80 in the city Several hundred village and district orga nizatlons were affected.
The arrest of the sister-in-law of Mifc. Sarojlni Naidu, tne poet who has been one of the most energetic Nationalist leaders ln India and at Ixmdon, rounded out the police raids on all Bombay congress organizations. Mrs. Nal du’s Bister-ln-iaw, Mrs. Kamal Chattopadhya, was taken to Jail after she had directed the posting of pickets at foreign cloth shops.
Dr. Bacon Seeks Return Of Missing Records
Dr. Francis Bacon, counsellor of men, today issued a request that students be on the lookout for a manila folder of valuable records that disappeared from his office sometime during the past two days.
The folder contained membership lists of all campus fraternities and other data necessary in determining semester grade averages of the groups. Workers on the office believe that thc papers may have been picked up by mistake by some student whose books were lying on top of them.
ANDRE MAGINOT SUCCUMBS AFTER 3-WEEK ILLNESS
Architectural Work Exhibition This Week
An exhibit of work done by freshmen from colleges and universities throughout the United States is on display this week at he College of Architecture. The exhibit includes a variety of drawings, among them designs and plans for sbOPH, stores, schools, and homes. According to Dean Weatherhead, the drawings wil) be here only a week.
Aeneas Hall Men To Hold Informal Dance
Glenna Gould, pianist, will play "Etude ln F Minor" by Liszt and "Etude" by Bortkiewlcz.
Members of Aeneas hall will hold an informal dance ou Friday, to 12 p.m., at the Gaylord apartments, 3355 Wilshire boulevard. Patrons will be Francis Bacon, counsellor of men, and Dean and Mrs. McClung of the College of Commerce.
Charles Gibler, resident at the hall, is in charge of tbe dance. Bids for the dance may be secured from him or at the office of Aeneas ball.
SAN FRANCISCO—(UP) — The Stale Railroad commission today ordered the out hern Pact Ac railroad to construct safety gates at four C crossings in Burlingame, but ruled tbat the city of Burlingame shall pay for them.
I
S.C. School Head To Arrive Friday
Dr. W. D. Morarlty, director of the School of Merchandising, will arrive here tomorrow from an extensive trip ln the East where he attended three conventions and studied business methods ln large cities.
Dr. Moriarlty delivered an address, "Retail Types and Trends,” at tiie annual convention of the National association of Teachers of Marketing and Merchandising which w as iu session In Washington, D.C. from Dec. 28 to 30. He also attended conventions of the American Economic association aud of the American Association of University Instructors in Accounting which were In session there at tlie samt time.
ELKINS, W. Va.. Jan ti —(UP) —The body of Lieut. E. H. Bobbitt, Jr., 24. army pilot missing since Christmas Eve, Has found at Valley Head, W. Va., near here today In a thickly timbered section of lhe Cheat mountains.
PARIS, Thursday, Jan. 7—(UP) —M. Andre Maginot, French minister of war, died today.
The war minister, who was 54 years old, had been III with typhoid for three weeks. Hospital authorities believed he was progressing favorably until last night. Hia condition suddenly became worse. He sank rapidly, dying at 2 a.m. in the Paris clinic.
Maglnot's death is likely to upset the delicate political balance In the Laval cabinet, and may even result in Premier Laval offering his resignation so he can try to form a new cabinet including radical party members.
Maginot headed the Centrist group in the Chamber of Deputies and was a great nationalist. He advocated a large army, and had prepared a program whereby not a single soldier or gun would be reduced without France obtaining necessary guarantees of security.
FINAL FIELD TRIP TO BE HELD SAT.
Climaxing a semester of study Malcolm H. Bissel, associate professor of geology, will lead a fleld trip to Mulholland drive next Saturday morning.
Mr. Bissel says that practically every type of formation, including folds, thrusts, and faults, is displayed in the cuts along the road.
The excursionists will meet on Franklin avenue, one block west of La Brea, 9 o'clock Saturday morning.
A TERTULIA CLUB TO PRESENT PLAY
"El Idllio de Lolita en Nueva York,” a two-act Spanish comedy, will be presented by the members of La Tertulia, campus Spanish club, at the **Y” hut, Friday evening, Jan. 8, Victor Sein, director of the play, announced yesterday.
Fourteen studeuts of Spanish take part In tbe play, the first production of tbls magnitude by La Tertulia. Members of the U.C. LA. Spanish club and faculty have beeu invited to attend.
Those taking part Include Christine Barbagbia, Noel Lacayo, Pros per Jaranllio, Evelyn Gitler, Fran cisco Duran, Doris Thomas. Carlos Escudero, Margaret Hufford, Ernestine Valencia, Isabela Valencia, William White, Klcardo de Leon, l.ambert Marks, and l^amel Wai-t er*.
College of Music Offers Course For Journalists and Musicians
Journalism and muaic students will be Interested in a new course, aesthetics and criticism ot music, which is offered next semester at the College ot Music by David Bruno Usher. Two units will be given for the class which meets on Wednesdays trom 4:30 to 6. beginning Feb. 3. A tuition fee of $25 is charged.
Skill nnd practice in the forma #standards. Ethics and tactics in
tion of judgments or criticisms In the fleld of music is the aim of the course. It will include the study of sensations, emotions, and intellectual Judgments, the correlation of music with other arts, and community conditions governing music and criticism. Practical experiments will be made in balancing historical and individual
particular practical application to Journalism and style and liberty as applied to music will be included In the course.
Mr. Usher was music critic for the Evening Express from 1916 to
TAY BROWN IS 1932 GRIDIRON TEAM LEADER
Tackle Elected At Annual Football Banquet; Pink-ert Also Honored.
Tay Brown will lead the Thundering Held through the 1932 foot* ball season.
The big stellar tackle was elected varsity captain last night at the annual football banquet held at the California club. Brown is a Junior, aud will bo onn of tho youngest men ever to lead a team for Troy—be Is not yet 2L H* pla) ed football at Compton high I school before entering 8.C..wl»er« he won a frosh numeral and two varsity letters in football. Physical education Is his major.
Men of the varsity team also voted Erny Pinckert as the most valuable man on the 1931 championship leam.
Harry J. Bauer, vice president of the university board of trustees, j was toastmaster at the banquet! which was attended by the team, the coaching staft, the administration, and more than 300 alumni. ^ Ho Introduced Frank G. Dickinson, professor of economics at tho University of Illinois, and originator of the Dickinson system of determining the national championship. Dickinson was generous in his praise of the tltfe-winning Trojans.
Dickinson handed out diplomas symbolic of the national Utle lo the lettermen, the coaches, and the trainers. The iropUl*a won by the leam during Uie season were on display at the banquet.
William Hunter, director of athletics. Stanley Williamson, who , captained the team last year. Coach Howard Jones, Prealdent ltufus B. von KlelnSmid. and ■ Francis Bushard. A.S.U.S.C. pres-1 Idenut, were among the speakers on tbe program.
At an assembly held yesterday’ morning in Bovard auditorium. Professor Dickinson presented the University with the Knute Rockne trophy. Galus Shaver received tbe University club plaquo for being the valuable player on a California football team, aud Erny Pinckert waa given the Douglas Fairbanks cup. This last award is for being the most valuable player as Judged by college players throughout the country who played agalnat him.
Illinois Senate Takes Steps To Aid Windy City
SPRINGFIELD, IU., Jan. «— (U P)— The Illinois Stale Senate passed a bill today to reorganize Cook county's taxing machinery and thereby “save Chicago from financial anarchy.”
The measure will be ruabed to the House in the hope that within a month or two flrst steps may be taken to put Chicago's tottering government back on its feet through emergency loans, pending collection of nearly $400,000,000 ln back taxes.
Chicago now awes $650,000,000. It has hardly a cent in Its treasuries. All public employees bave taken 20 per cent pay cuts. Firemen and police, as well as Uie teachers, are going aalaryless. Public building haa stopped. Several million dollars worth of bonds already have been defaulted.
Ball, Chain To Meet At Sigma Tau House
There will be a meeting of the Ball and Chain club tonight at 8 in the Slgma Tau house, 745 Weal Adams Btreet. Members and pledges will attend; plans for initiation will be brought up.
Kay Abbott, president, stated that lhe members on the nation aiiza’.lon committee would give s
1931. He attended the Koyal Con report on the information that hai senatory of Music in Leipsig and been received from other universi
he studied muaic al Oxford uni- lies where team manager's---1
varsity. aatious are in evideno*.
S . 1

LeWSREEL
L * po*tn L»- •**othtr
' s. C. New.
' ►"*
Ii»
SOUTHERN
A L 1 F O R N I A
DAILYPTROJAN
FINAL EXAMS
Final examinations be-9'" Friday, January 22. Complete schedule on page four.
Los Angeles, California, Thursday, January 7, 1932,
MS BAND [CED FOR |0R DANCE
W. S. G. A. Holds Special Meet At Noon Today
No. 69
GOVERNMENT’S FOREIGN BOND STAND FLAYED
Marjorie Grewell, In charge of the W.S.G.A. bridge tea calls a special meeting in S.U. 235 at noon today.
- I Those who will attend: Pauline I -
From New York williams. Eleanor Beris. Eiin. State Department Respon-Will Play At Wrat, Joan McMasters, pat vigne, j sible For Security Loss-
Christy Welsh, Jule Homano, Edith „ r.lacc
«ade- Schiller, Jane McPhee, Tat Dow | ’ pays.
VAN LANDINGHAM ney. Irene Bronais, Betty Jones, | WASHINGTON, Jan. 6.—(UP)—
* official* announced , Mary Jane Hackett, Mary Ann . Mo,.ft, re8pon((lbl,lty for h
have just re- Cotton, Mary Louise Bouelle, Lou- , ttat tlK»> o„. 'losses of American investors on
______________defaulted South American bonds
j:::::: alpha chi alpha
pined great popularity
I, students in the East i Los Angeles on Frl-
Iji, |g time to play for ,liich I* scheduled for tie famous Blue room hotel.
TO PLEDGE SEVEN LEADING WOMEN
was placed on the state department today by Senator Tarter (Mass of Virginia, former secretary of the treasury. He denounced the state department's policy of | passing upon the desirability of foreign loa as floated in this country.
sophomore J Though the approval purported
Seven outstanding . . and junior women will become I to be as to the political desira-Tith them an in'ia 0 ^ pledges of Alpha Chi Alpha, na- i bility only, not the intrinsic
[ftgapements, including u thc Palace hotel fork, the Palmer house the Arizona Biltmore,
I years on the Orphe-
rl tbe boys will invade prepared to give S. C. ad latest musical hits |
tional honorary journalism soror- j "orth, Glass said that the depart-ity, this afternoon at 3 o'clock ln ment acted without authority in
the Alpha Gamma Delta house.
These women have been recognized by the sorority because of their work on campus publications including the Wampus, EI Bodeo, Daily Trojan, and the Student handbook. One of the pre-
ntrj.
i trio, land .i-- one reqUlg|teB for membership in this group is one and a half year's work on one or more of the above
outstanding in accompany the or-| incidentally, Mr. Cave i no mean reputation , betides being able to | in a saxophone, t the prom were placed lerday, and may be
I trom fraternity repre-or at the Student store.
I price of $4 has glv-the slogan, 'Bu'y a i Junior prom and get |pair of socks with what 1 (Adv.)
: ■ H Musicians
id H jy Appear in
■ DOW fl ital Concert
OOPf. ■
■ '■ Kir opening assembly for
fl Khedtiled for this noon titil hall of the College i Trojan musicians will
nfl i program of vocal and
' fl ictions.
-ifl Gould, pianist, will play F Minor” by I.izst, and Stf»ard will play “Min-
i » lonatina by Ravel, ubeth Waldorf, soprano,
ie i “E'er Since the Day lo Thee I Gave Me” from li) Chartentier. “Con-
tail!” from Thomas’ non," and "Dawn" by 11 be sung by Alice Ash-Wtb Rowley will also
--
pu blications.
Juanita Mills, president ot Alpha Chi Alpha, will conduct the pledging ceremony. Miss Rita Padway, national vice-president of the organization will be present.
Following the pledging services, refreshments will be served under the direction of Erma Eldridge.
Street Bridge peering Topic
ing and Construction of will be the subject of ■* to be given by Mr. uiler to studentB in en-la thia morning. Mr. ill make special reier-tbe new Sixth street Be construction of which ■wiilng as engineer of lor the city. Thc lecture Y* '* Science 159 at 11
Md trip of tho semes-
place on Friday,
The itudent a will visit tun.
ttall,
completed Sixth
Aching France
»> ^ 5 —(UP)— Hard k aim!? !!me re*ChiDK
HONORARY GROUP TO HEAR REPORTS
Psl Chl, honorary psychology fraternity will hear reports on studies being carried on by three Ph.D. candidates In the psychology ot voice, in the phenomenon of twins, and in the "knee Jerk" reflex, in the discussion program of the monthly dinner meeting next Tuesday night.
The three candidates who will report are Doncaster Humm, neurologist and clinic worker; Charles Frederick Lindsley, radio speaker and chairman of the speech department at Occidental college; and Walter Varnum, national president of Psi Chi.
Reservations for the dinner should be made in the offlce of Dr. George Mount, according to iJrant Clark, president.
law and without proper know! edge.
BLAMES STATE
"They (the department) are morally responsible for every one of these loans,” Glass said, “for the 9815,000,000 of defaulted South American bonds and for the outstanding indcbtness that will not be paid—probably $5,000,000,000.’
Explaining the department of commerce’s policy of reporting frankly on finance conditions in Latin America, for the benefit of the American people generally. Governor M. Jones, of the department, disclosed tbe Colombian minister hero tried unsuccessfully to hold up a bulletin regarding Colombian conditions.
Later, Jones said, the Colombian | authorities recognized the desirability of tbe report, as a brake on borrowing, and as a result the present Colombian minister was most friendly to department experts.
NO AUTHORITV
It wau knowledge of this testimony that roused Glass, one of the leading finance experts of the country, and father of the Federal Reserve system.
"The state depatrment passes on foreign bonds without th authority of law,” he said. "I pointed that out two years ago. The Senate asked the department by what authority lt was acting. The replay was positively idotic. The Senate unanimously passed a resolution asking the department to desist.
"The bonds were sold in the open market in competition with legitimate securities of legitimate American enterprises.’*
Senator Smith Proposes $200,000,000 Farm Loan
As Rider On Hoover Bill
WASHINGTON, Jan. 6—(UP)—President Hoover’s two-billion dollar reconstruction finance corporation bill, buttressed by a committee report declaring that a critical banking situation needs immediate action, was brought before thc senate today.
A $200,000,000 farm loan appropriation was immediately
proposed an amendment to the bill*-
by Senator Ellison D. Smith, Dem.. | FINISHED
BY APPLICANTS IN PHARMACY SCHOOL
S. C. The Smith amendment would authorize the secretary of agricu'ture to make loans or ad vances on flrst lines of crops, to farmers who are unable to get credit berause of bank failures and the depression.
Disclosure that loans can be made to railroads within a week after the giant government loan-bank Is set up was made by the Senate banking committee In its favorable report on the bill, submitted by Senator F. C. Walcott, Repn., Conn.
2,290 BANKS SUSPENDED
The report said that 2,290 banks suspended during 1931, with total deposits of *1,759,000,000 (billions), nearly one-half of them in the last three months of the year.
In addition the committee also approved the $125,000,000 bill for added capital of the Federal Farm I/oan banks, second item on the president's economic program. The measure carries a $25,000,000 Increase over the fund as voted by the House before the holidays.
PASS NORRIS BILL
The Senate tired after 25 futile ballots in its ‘‘sons of the wild jackass" row over election of a president pro tem, voted to set it aside and for the seventh consecutive time passed the Norris constitutional amendment to abol ish short sessions of Congress, 63 to 7.
The House received a resolution for impeachment of Secretary of Treasury Andrew W. Mellon and passed the tirst deficiency appropriation bill after trimming $14 173,000 from budget estimates in eluding $700,000 designed to in crease the comforts ot congress men's offices.
Gratis Memberships Offered Ad Students ^jr Regulations
As a special inducement to mem ( T Otrirt IVnHJ)
bers of the department of adver-I U, I
Using to attend the Friday noon forum meetings of the Los Ange-lus Advertising club, free memberships in the Junior Advertising club will be given to the two Btudents attending the greatest number of meetings throughout the year ,
All contestants for the memberships will be required to write a 250-word essay on what the meetings hvae meant to them.
The Friday forum is held at the City club, 833 South Spring street at noon. Students may or may not attend the luncheon, which is served for 75 cents.
Airminded students may now obtain private pilot permits wllh reduced eyesight requirements as a result of a new ruling by the aeronautics branch of the United States department of commerce. Dr. Ernest A. Hutchinson, chairman of the department of phys-ics-optics, declared yesterday.
Persons who visit the S.C. department of physics-optics for examination and corrective treatment will profit by the more liberal regulations which ^allow certain visual defects If proper goggles are worn while flying.
f FWk lh* la,t plicants finished the California state board of pharmacy quarterly examination today ln 306 Science hBll and 301 School of Uw building.
The examination, which one must pass in order to become a licensed druggist in California, has been taking place for three days. Six examiners are in charge, and applicants include former residents of the states of New York, Pennsylvania, and Missouri, as well as undergraduates from all parts of southern California.
V. L. Schaefer, one of the examiners, states tbat all California applicants may be undergraduates, while non-residents muBt be graduate's before they are permitted to take the test. However, in 1933, the Pre-requisite law, which requires that all applicants be graduates of recognized colleges, will be in full effect.
Subjects which tlie examination coveerd are: chemistry, toxicology, materia medica, pharmacy, and the identification of drug*. The next state board test will be given the flrst Tuesday of April.
Negro Educator Will Speak At Y.M.C.A. Meeting
With the theme centering around the recent student conference at Asilomar, and with Howard J. Thurman, Negro pastor, poet, and educator secured as principal speaker, the meeting of the Y.M. C.A. tonight promises to set a high standard for the coming year.
Delegates from Southern California to the Asilomar conference will outline the meetluga and Mr. Thurman, one of the speakers and leaders at the conclave, will also give his impressions of the annual outing during bis talk.
Both men and women are invited to attend and reservations may be made up to noon today at the desk in the “Y" hut. The banquet will start at 5:30 p.m. and will coat 50 cents a plate, according to “Y” officials.
Additional entertainment will be offered by a negro male quartet from radio nation KHJ.
BRITISH MOVE AGAINST CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE
Government Outlaws Indian National Congress Organization.
BOMBAY, India, Jan. 6.—(UP) ! —The government dealt another i blow to the Indian Independence movement today by outlawing the j entire National congress organiza- j tion and warning the people to refrain from civil disobedience on threat of severe punishment.
"We cannot tolerate open or secret help for those beyond the law," Sir Frederick Sykes, governor of Bombay, declared In a message to the people. "I^aw-abidlng citizens have nothing to fear from the new ordinances, which will protect people in pursuit of lawful activities. But law-abiding citizens must abstain from the participation in or encouragement of civil disobedience.”
SEIZE FUNDS With the Mahatma Gandhi, leading power of the Nationalists, and his chief lieutenants In prison, the government continued to hold the upper hand In the “warfare" which so far has centered in Bombay and other western regions.
Nationalist funtfi totalling some 50,000 rupees, or about $15,000 were seized from Bombay banks and the arrests of congress off) cials and volunteers, including many women, continued. The flrst efforts of the Nationalists, chiefly women, to picket Bombay shops selling British goo(fw, were unsuc cessful when police arrested or dispersed the pickets.
INVOLVES 500 GROUPS The outlawing of all congress and allied organizations through out Bombay Involved 500 groups including 80 in the city Several hundred village and district orga nizatlons were affected.
The arrest of the sister-in-law of Mifc. Sarojlni Naidu, tne poet who has been one of the most energetic Nationalist leaders ln India and at Ixmdon, rounded out the police raids on all Bombay congress organizations. Mrs. Nal du’s Bister-ln-iaw, Mrs. Kamal Chattopadhya, was taken to Jail after she had directed the posting of pickets at foreign cloth shops.
Dr. Bacon Seeks Return Of Missing Records
Dr. Francis Bacon, counsellor of men, today issued a request that students be on the lookout for a manila folder of valuable records that disappeared from his office sometime during the past two days.
The folder contained membership lists of all campus fraternities and other data necessary in determining semester grade averages of the groups. Workers on the office believe that thc papers may have been picked up by mistake by some student whose books were lying on top of them.
ANDRE MAGINOT SUCCUMBS AFTER 3-WEEK ILLNESS
Architectural Work Exhibition This Week
An exhibit of work done by freshmen from colleges and universities throughout the United States is on display this week at he College of Architecture. The exhibit includes a variety of drawings, among them designs and plans for sbOPH, stores, schools, and homes. According to Dean Weatherhead, the drawings wil) be here only a week.
Aeneas Hall Men To Hold Informal Dance
Glenna Gould, pianist, will play "Etude ln F Minor" by Liszt and "Etude" by Bortkiewlcz.
Members of Aeneas hall will hold an informal dance ou Friday, to 12 p.m., at the Gaylord apartments, 3355 Wilshire boulevard. Patrons will be Francis Bacon, counsellor of men, and Dean and Mrs. McClung of the College of Commerce.
Charles Gibler, resident at the hall, is in charge of tbe dance. Bids for the dance may be secured from him or at the office of Aeneas ball.
SAN FRANCISCO—(UP) — The Stale Railroad commission today ordered the out hern Pact Ac railroad to construct safety gates at four C crossings in Burlingame, but ruled tbat the city of Burlingame shall pay for them.
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S.C. School Head To Arrive Friday
Dr. W. D. Morarlty, director of the School of Merchandising, will arrive here tomorrow from an extensive trip ln the East where he attended three conventions and studied business methods ln large cities.
Dr. Moriarlty delivered an address, "Retail Types and Trends,” at tiie annual convention of the National association of Teachers of Marketing and Merchandising which w as iu session In Washington, D.C. from Dec. 28 to 30. He also attended conventions of the American Economic association aud of the American Association of University Instructors in Accounting which were In session there at tlie samt time.
ELKINS, W. Va.. Jan ti —(UP) —The body of Lieut. E. H. Bobbitt, Jr., 24. army pilot missing since Christmas Eve, Has found at Valley Head, W. Va., near here today In a thickly timbered section of lhe Cheat mountains.
PARIS, Thursday, Jan. 7—(UP) —M. Andre Maginot, French minister of war, died today.
The war minister, who was 54 years old, had been III with typhoid for three weeks. Hospital authorities believed he was progressing favorably until last night. Hia condition suddenly became worse. He sank rapidly, dying at 2 a.m. in the Paris clinic.
Maglnot's death is likely to upset the delicate political balance In the Laval cabinet, and may even result in Premier Laval offering his resignation so he can try to form a new cabinet including radical party members.
Maginot headed the Centrist group in the Chamber of Deputies and was a great nationalist. He advocated a large army, and had prepared a program whereby not a single soldier or gun would be reduced without France obtaining necessary guarantees of security.
FINAL FIELD TRIP TO BE HELD SAT.
Climaxing a semester of study Malcolm H. Bissel, associate professor of geology, will lead a fleld trip to Mulholland drive next Saturday morning.
Mr. Bissel says that practically every type of formation, including folds, thrusts, and faults, is displayed in the cuts along the road.
The excursionists will meet on Franklin avenue, one block west of La Brea, 9 o'clock Saturday morning.
A TERTULIA CLUB TO PRESENT PLAY
"El Idllio de Lolita en Nueva York,” a two-act Spanish comedy, will be presented by the members of La Tertulia, campus Spanish club, at the **Y” hut, Friday evening, Jan. 8, Victor Sein, director of the play, announced yesterday.
Fourteen studeuts of Spanish take part In tbe play, the first production of tbls magnitude by La Tertulia. Members of the U.C. LA. Spanish club and faculty have beeu invited to attend.
Those taking part Include Christine Barbagbia, Noel Lacayo, Pros per Jaranllio, Evelyn Gitler, Fran cisco Duran, Doris Thomas. Carlos Escudero, Margaret Hufford, Ernestine Valencia, Isabela Valencia, William White, Klcardo de Leon, l.ambert Marks, and l^amel Wai-t er*.
College of Music Offers Course For Journalists and Musicians
Journalism and muaic students will be Interested in a new course, aesthetics and criticism ot music, which is offered next semester at the College ot Music by David Bruno Usher. Two units will be given for the class which meets on Wednesdays trom 4:30 to 6. beginning Feb. 3. A tuition fee of $25 is charged.
Skill nnd practice in the forma #standards. Ethics and tactics in
tion of judgments or criticisms In the fleld of music is the aim of the course. It will include the study of sensations, emotions, and intellectual Judgments, the correlation of music with other arts, and community conditions governing music and criticism. Practical experiments will be made in balancing historical and individual
particular practical application to Journalism and style and liberty as applied to music will be included In the course.
Mr. Usher was music critic for the Evening Express from 1916 to
TAY BROWN IS 1932 GRIDIRON TEAM LEADER
Tackle Elected At Annual Football Banquet; Pink-ert Also Honored.
Tay Brown will lead the Thundering Held through the 1932 foot* ball season.
The big stellar tackle was elected varsity captain last night at the annual football banquet held at the California club. Brown is a Junior, aud will bo onn of tho youngest men ever to lead a team for Troy—be Is not yet 2L H* pla) ed football at Compton high I school before entering 8.C..wl»er« he won a frosh numeral and two varsity letters in football. Physical education Is his major.
Men of the varsity team also voted Erny Pinckert as the most valuable man on the 1931 championship leam.
Harry J. Bauer, vice president of the university board of trustees, j was toastmaster at the banquet! which was attended by the team, the coaching staft, the administration, and more than 300 alumni. ^ Ho Introduced Frank G. Dickinson, professor of economics at tho University of Illinois, and originator of the Dickinson system of determining the national championship. Dickinson was generous in his praise of the tltfe-winning Trojans.
Dickinson handed out diplomas symbolic of the national Utle lo the lettermen, the coaches, and the trainers. The iropUl*a won by the leam during Uie season were on display at the banquet.
William Hunter, director of athletics. Stanley Williamson, who , captained the team last year. Coach Howard Jones, Prealdent ltufus B. von KlelnSmid. and ■ Francis Bushard. A.S.U.S.C. pres-1 Idenut, were among the speakers on tbe program.
At an assembly held yesterday’ morning in Bovard auditorium. Professor Dickinson presented the University with the Knute Rockne trophy. Galus Shaver received tbe University club plaquo for being the valuable player on a California football team, aud Erny Pinckert waa given the Douglas Fairbanks cup. This last award is for being the most valuable player as Judged by college players throughout the country who played agalnat him.
Illinois Senate Takes Steps To Aid Windy City
SPRINGFIELD, IU., Jan. «— (U P)— The Illinois Stale Senate passed a bill today to reorganize Cook county's taxing machinery and thereby “save Chicago from financial anarchy.”
The measure will be ruabed to the House in the hope that within a month or two flrst steps may be taken to put Chicago's tottering government back on its feet through emergency loans, pending collection of nearly $400,000,000 ln back taxes.
Chicago now awes $650,000,000. It has hardly a cent in Its treasuries. All public employees bave taken 20 per cent pay cuts. Firemen and police, as well as Uie teachers, are going aalaryless. Public building haa stopped. Several million dollars worth of bonds already have been defaulted.
Ball, Chain To Meet At Sigma Tau House
There will be a meeting of the Ball and Chain club tonight at 8 in the Slgma Tau house, 745 Weal Adams Btreet. Members and pledges will attend; plans for initiation will be brought up.
Kay Abbott, president, stated that lhe members on the nation aiiza’.lon committee would give s
1931. He attended the Koyal Con report on the information that hai senatory of Music in Leipsig and been received from other universi
he studied muaic al Oxford uni- lies where team manager's---1
varsity. aatious are in evideno*.
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